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WARRIOR [948]
4 years ago
11

Until yesterday, J. J. worked for his father's company and was covered by the company's large group health plan. He stopped work

ing to go to college. He is 26 years of age and wants to keep the same coverage until he earns his degree in approximately 24 months. Which of the following statements is true?
A. A good option for J.J. is to exercise the COBRA option under his father's group plan
B. J.J. can obtain coverage under COBRA, but it won't be the same coverage he had under his father's group plan
C. As a student, J.J. is still covered under his father's group plan
D. J.J.'s only option is to buy a personal plan of coverage
Business
1 answer:
Yuki888 [10]4 years ago
5 0

Answer: A good option for J.J. is to exercise the COBRA option under his father's group plan

Explanation:

Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) option provides the workers and their families the right thing continue enjoying and using the group health benefits after they have lost their health benefits.

It should be noted that this is for a certain period of time under some circumstances like job loss or going to college as in J.J case.

You might be interested in
"To meet the customer's investment objective of tax advantaged income, the BEST recommendation is for the customer to:"
marishachu [46]

Customer Name: Jack and Jill Customer

Ages: 62 and 57

Marital Status: Married - 39 years

Dependents: None

Occupations: Jack - Manufacturing Manager - Dyno-Mite Corp.

Jill - Marketing Consultant - Self Employed

Household Income: $140,000 Joint Income

($100,000 for Jack and $40,000 for Jill)

Net Worth: $1,100,000 (excluding residence)

Own Home: Yes $420,000 Value, No Mortgage

Investment Objectives: Income / Tax Advantaged

Risk Tolerance: Moderate

Investment Time Horizon: 25 years

Investment Experience: 30 years

Tax Bracket: 30%

Current Portfolio Composition: Cash in Bank: $30,000

Growth Fund: $50,000

Variable Annuity: $50,000

Growth Stocks: $150,000

Retirement Accounts:

Jack's IRA: $100,000 invested in growth stocks

Jack's 401(k): $600,000 invested in Dyno-Mite Corp. stock

Jack's 529 Plan for Grandchild: $20,000 in growth mutual fund

To meet the customer's investment objective of tax advantaged income, the BEST recommendation is for the customer to:

A. immediately liquidate the entire Dyno-Mite position and invest the proceeds in high yield bonds

B. set a minimum and maximum threshold price to liquidate as much of the Dyno-Mite stock as the customer will permit, and invest the proceeds in high yielding common and preferred stocks

C. liquidate the IRA without penalty since Jack is past age 59 1/2, and use the proceeds to buy corporate income bonds

D. consider early retirement, since Jack is old enough to receive Social Security as a means of supplementing income

Answer:

B. set a minimum and maximum threshold price to liquidate as much of the Dyno-Mite stock as the customer will permit, and invest the proceeds in high yielding common and preferred stocks

Explanation:

Given that, the customer has a "moderate" risk tolerance level and dividend income is at the moment taxed at the preferential rate of 15%, therefore, it is expected that investments in high yielding common and preferred stocks will meet the customer's objective of tax-advantaged income.

Hence, the right answer is Option B. set a minimum and maximum threshold price to liquidate as much of the Dyno-Mite stock as the customer will permit, and invest the proceeds in high yielding common and preferred stocks

5 0
4 years ago
Which of the following is an advantage of the corporate form of business when compared to sole proprietorships and partnerships?
Rudiy27

Answer:

D. Limited Partnership

Explanation:

Sole proprietorship is business owned , run & managed by single owner. Partnership is a business owned , run & managed by small group of people - deciding to share its profits .

Entrepreneurs in these have Unlimited Liability on personal assets, in case business assets are insufficient to settle business liabilities .

Corporation is a separate legal entity, distinct from its huge group of owners , guided by a board of directors. In case of any claim / sue case : it is against corporate entity & not the people, so they don't have any unlimited liability risk on personal assets to fulfil company's claims .

5 0
3 years ago
On July 1, Year 1, Danzer Industries Inc. issued $40,000,000 of 10-year, 7% bonds at a market (effective) interest rate of 8%, r
sammy [17]

Answer:

1. Journalize the entry to record the amount of cash proceeds from the issuance of the bonds on July 1, Year 1.

Dr Cash 37,282,062

Dr Discount on bonds payable 2,717,938

    Cr Bonds payable 40,000,000

2. Journalize the entries to record the following:

a. The first semiannual interest payment on December 31, Year 1, and the amortization of the bond discount, using the straight-line method. Round to the nearest dollar.

discount on bonds payable = 2,717,938 / 20 coupons = $135,896.90

December 31, Year 1, first coupon payment

Dr Interest expense 1,535,896.90

    Cr Cash 1,400,000

    Cr Discount on bonds payable 135,896.90

b. The interest payment on June 30, Year 2, and the amortization of the bond discount,using the straight-line method. Round to the nearest dollar.

June 30, Year 2, second coupon payment

Dr Interest expense 1,535,896.90

    Cr Cash 1,400,000

    Cr Discount on bonds payable 135,896.90

3. Determine the total interest expense for Year 1.

$1,535,896.90

4. Will the bond proceeds always be less than the face amount of the bonds when the contract rate is less than the market rate of interest?

yes, if the market rate is higher than the coupon rate, the bonds will sell at a discount.

5. (Appendix 1) Compute the price of $37,282,062 received for the bonds by using the present value tables in Appendix A at the end of the text. Round to the nearest dollar.

bond price = PV of face value + PV of coupon payments

  • PV of face value = $40,000,000 x 0.4564 (PV factor, 4%, 20 periods) = $18,256,000
  • PV of coupon payments = $1,400,000 x 13.590 (PV annuity factor, 4%, 20 periods) = $19,026,000

bond's market price = $18,256,000 + $19,026,000 = $37,282,000

6 0
3 years ago
Assume (1) estimated fixed manufacturing overhead for the coming period of $221,000, (2) estimated variable manufacturing overhe
svetoff [14.1K]

Answer:

The predetermined plantwide overhead rate for the period is closest to:____.

$6.02

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Estimated fixed manufacturing overhead = $221,000

Estimated variable manufacturing overhead = $2.00 per DLH

Actual manufacturing overhead for the period = $320,000

Actual direct labor-hours worked = 54,000 hours

Estimated direct labor-hours to be worked in the coming period = 55,000 hours.

Predetermined plantwide overhead rate:

Estimated fixed manufacturing overhead =     $221,000

Estimated variable manufacturing overhead =   110,000 ($2.00 * 55,000)

Total estimated manufacturing overhead = $331,000

Predetermined rate = $331,000/55,000 = $6.02 per DLH

5 0
3 years ago
EBook
KonstantinChe [14]

Answer:

Cost Flow Methods

Gross profit and ending inventory on April 30 using:

                                                          Gross Profit     Ending Inventory

(a) first-in, first-out (FIFO)                     $75                   $546

(b) last-in, first-out (LIFO)                       $71                   $542

(c) weighted average cost method     $73                   $544

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Item Beta   Cost

April 2  Purchase   $270

April 15  Purchase   272

April 20  Purchase 274

Total                      $816

Average cost per unit = $272  ($816/ 3 units)

Assume that one unit is sold on April 27 for $345

Gross profit and ending inventory on April 30 using:

                                                          Gross Profit            Ending Inventory

(a) first-in, first-out (FIFO)                 $75 ($345 - $270)  $546 ($816 - $270)

(b) last-in, first-out (LIFO)                   $71 ($345 - $274)   $542 ($816 - $274)

(c) weighted average cost method $73 ($345 - $272)  $544 ($816 - $272)

Ending inventory = Cost of goods available for sale Minus Cost of goods sold

Gross profit = Sales Minus Cost of goods sold

3 0
3 years ago
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